Ride Buck Wild Snowboard 2012

Yeeeehaaaw. Get ready to be the cowboy of the alpine rodeo with the Ride Buck Wild Snowboard. Designed with Ride Prorize™ Rocker, this park machine has a minimal rocker profile and a long, stable flat zone that is engineered to have you landing jump after jump with supreme control and comfort. Get to the park early and stay there late till they kick you out, with this hard-hitting freestyle machine strapped to your feet.

Rocker Type

Prorize™ Rocker - Provides freestlye riders with minimal rocker and a long, stable flat zone that is perfect for going big in the park and landing with total control.

Thin Construction - Features a tapered tip and tail to reduce swing weight, enhanced tip flex, and sidewalls that run past the effective edge.

Sidecut

Directional

Core

Wood core

Pop Rods® 2.0 - Provides supreme pop and snap

Laminates

Hybrid Glass - Triaxial on top, biaxial on base and balanced torsion and stiffness for better response with speed.

Sidewalls

Slimewalls® - The virtually indestructible 85A sidewall technology wins on absorbing impacts rather than defending against them. The urethane in Slimewalls® smoothes the interaction with the snow, wood or metal surfaces you may ride on.

Base

Fusion 4000 Base™ - Hard and durable giving you one of the fastest base materials out there (sintered).

Carbon Array 3™ - Power distributing technology that provides total board control in every stance. Widespread carbon stringers placed at the binding zone gather input from any stance width and all pressure angles. Rider input is then channeled to the opposing contact point for maximum board control.

Specs

Terrain:Freestyle

Freestyle

Freestyle or park snowboards tend to be a bit shorter in length and love terrain parks, rails, jibs, trash cans, tree trunks, riding switch (non-dominant foot forward), wall rides and more. Freestyle boards often feature a true twin shape, and are typically selected by those looking to ride the terrain park. A more versatile variant of a freestyle board is the all-mountain freestyle, which combines the versatility of an all mountain snowboard with the playfulness of a freestyle snowboard.

Ability Level:Intermediate-Advanced

Intermediate-Advanced

The majority of skiers/snowboarders fall into this level, whether you like to carve on groomers or venture into the powder. These skis/snowboards may be somewhat wider than beginner-intermediate skis, usually with a stronger wood core and sandwich sidewall construction. Depending on the type of ski, intermediate-advanced level skis may have full camber, rocker, or some combination of the two.

Rocker Type:Rocker/Flat/Rocker

Rocker/Flat/Rocker

Rocker/Flat/Rocker is another variation on the rocker theme that seeks to provide a little more hard snow edgehold and pop than full rocker while retaining ease of turning and float. Performance is between a fully rockered board and a flat board.

Flex Rating:Medium

Medium

The amount a snowboard flexes varies significantly between boards. Snowboard flex ratings are not necessarily standardized across manufacturers, so the flex may vary from brand to brand. Many manufacturers will give a number rating ranging from 1-10, 1 being softest and 10 being stiffest. Here at evo we have standardized the manufacturers' number ratings to a feel rating ranging from soft to very stiff. Generally you will find flex ratings of 1-2 as soft, 3-5 as medium, 6-8 as stiff, and 9-10 as very stiff. Flex ratings and feel may ultimately vary from snowboard to snowboard.